I am making the assumption that the black hole begins upon the event horizon. Hypothetically if you could see, you would see nothing; since there is no light being returned for your eyes to process, you are basically blind.
Well, by actual definition of a black hole, you cannot see it at all, so as far as what you could see in it . . .
nobody went there to see it. it is believed that there is nothing because of high gravity field held there it absorbs all the things.
you probably would desinagrate..
black .. :/
you would see the back of your head i dont reallt know
You cannot see a black hole when you are on Earth, unless a black hole were to absorb Earth, which even then, you would see it in a split-second before it would engulf you
Dude it is black for a reason. You can not see the black hole itself, but you can see the black hole distorting light, eating stars, or it's gravitational pull.
Black holes are invisible to the visible light spectrum and many others because their gravity is so strong it pulls in even light. So in theory yes. But a human body is FAR too light to ever form a black hole. However, if you define visibility as human perception of it, while we never see light from a black hole, we would notice the absence of light in an area, so even if it were possible to turn your body into a black hole, no one would see you, but the would see a black gap in space where you should be...
The bag would be sucked in, you would never see it again.
After the black hole dies out, (see When do black holes die and/or How does a black hole get smaller) it will become just a vacuum.
You cannot see a black hole when you are on Earth, unless a black hole were to absorb Earth, which even then, you would see it in a split-second before it would engulf you
You can't see the black hole but you can see its inflence on its environment. (You can see matter that is sucked into the black hole)
Dude it is black for a reason. You can not see the black hole itself, but you can see the black hole distorting light, eating stars, or it's gravitational pull.
If you call being past the event horizon being "in" the black hole, no. Because you wouldn't be there to see anything, you would be smooshed into your smallest atomic parts. If you ever want to "one with something" a black hole is the perfect place for you..everything gets pressed into the coldest densest thing - galactic people/star/spaceship goo. A long way from the black hole you might see the materials around it being changed, as you go closer you would see more and more things falling into the black hole until the ship and you and anything else nearby would become one. Ew.
You can't see a black hole.
You can't see a black hole.
A black hole
Black holes are invisible to the visible light spectrum and many others because their gravity is so strong it pulls in even light. So in theory yes. But a human body is FAR too light to ever form a black hole. However, if you define visibility as human perception of it, while we never see light from a black hole, we would notice the absence of light in an area, so even if it were possible to turn your body into a black hole, no one would see you, but the would see a black gap in space where you should be...
If you are talking about a black hole the answere is no. Not even light can ascape the force of gravity of a black hole, therefore you can't see the hole itself.
The force of the impact will still be absorbed by the black hole. By definition, a black hole is a very dense mass where no form of radiation can escape - not even light. Since no explosion is faster than light, a black hole would absorb the blast, the impact, and all forms of light and radiation that would be emitted from the bomb. If you were to watch a black hole, you would see no changes from it.
a black hole is caused by a supernova, then the black hole forms. the matter sucked in and gets shot through a worm hole. after the wormhole the matter gets shot out a white hole. the wormhole is impossible to see, for witch this hard to belive for it goes from one end of the galixy to the other endhope i helped!
The gravitational forces inside a black hole would be so severe that you wouldn't see anything. 1.) You would be killed instantly 2.) Any light present would be drawn towards the core, not your eyes, hence the name "black hole".